“The glory which
You have given Me I have given to them, that they may be one, just as We are
one” (John 17:22).
How is it that
Jesus says that He is giving His glory to us, and yet in Isaiah 42:8 God says, “I
am the LORD, that is My name; I will not give My glory to another, nor My
praise to graven images [idols]”?
For sure our God
does not give His glory to idols, but do we really believe that He doesn’t? Are
we asking God to give His glory to the idols we have made in life and in
religion? Do we not have household idols (as ancient peoples did), community
idols, national idols, professional and vocational idols? Are we honest enough
to consider that we just might have religious idols, Christianized idols? Have
we crafted our brand of Christianity into an idol?
Does our speech and teaching reveal our idols?
As to the idea
that God does not give His glory to another, this can help us understand what
Jesus says about giving His glory to us – for in giving His glory to us He does
not give His glory to another for we are One in the Father and the Son and
in the Holy Spirit. We have no oneness apart from the Oneness of the Trinity.
There are not two onenesses.
That is, we do
not look at the Trinty and see Oneness and then look at ourselves and see
oneness; for we cannot have oneness with a lower case “o,” such oneness is
impossible. Hence, in Christ we know koinonia in the Trinity, and knowing koinonia
in the Trinity is knowing the Oneness of the Trinity; this is ineffable, it is
the Holy of Holies.
Recall that
Jesus says, “Now, Father, glorify Me together with Yourself, with the glory
which I had with You before the world was” (17:5).
Jesus also
prays, “Father, I desire that they also, whom You have given Me, be with Me
where I am, so that they may see My glory which You have given Me” (17:24).
As the Father
gives His glory to Jesus, so Jesus gives His glory to us; so that the world may
know that the Father sent the Son and that the Father loves us even as He loves
Jesus.
O dear friends,
let us not forget that we “are all from one Father” (Hebrews 2:11) and that our
Father is “bringing many sons to glory” (Heb. 2:10).
As Jesus comes
to us, as He comes into the world, He comes “to be glorified in His saints,” He
comes that “the name of our Lord Jesus will be glorified in you, and you in Him”
(2 Thess. 1:10 – 12).
Let us remind
one another that we are “heirs of God and coheirs with Christ,” that there is a
glory “being revealed in us,” and that we are in the process of glorification
in Christ Jesus (Romans 8:17, 18, 30).
We are the Body
of Christ, we are the Bride of Christ; one with Him. Being one with Him, when
He gives His glory to us He does not give His glory to another, for we are in
the Us of John 17:21.
We have seen this
coming in our approach to John 17. Jesus gives us a glimpse in John 14:23 in
the Upper Room, “My Father will love him, and We will come to him and make Our
abode with him.”
Jesus emphasizes
our unity in Him with the Vine and the branches, “Abide in Me, and I in you…apart
from Me you can do nothing” (John 15:1 – 5). The Vine, Jesus Christ, is our sole
source of life.
There is only
one person who can live the Christian life, that Person is God.
All of our
little self-help idols which demand worship, all of our idols crafted into religious
images (as Christianized as they may be), all of our pragmatic programs, lead
us deeper and deeper into bondage and away from the liberty of Jesus Christ,
away from the koinonia of the Trinity, away from glorious Oneness with one
another in the Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit.
No wineskin can
contain the glory of the Holy Trinity, no wineskin can contain God’s unfolding
glory; how foolish to force others into straightjackets, how silly not to desire
God’s glory rather than glory for our fiefdoms and images.
I heard a denominational
leader saying that he hoped that 200 years from now his denomination would
still be going strong. How much better to hope that 200 years from now God’s
glory will be inhabiting His People who have been perfected into One in Jesus
Christ? How much better to desire a creditable testimony to the world of the
Father’s love for the Son?
Now for the dear
reader who thinks I’m being a bit harsh, I only ask you to look around you.
What do you see? Do you see Christians with a vision of the Church of Jesus Christ?
Do you see Christians with an understanding of the Body of Christ? Do you see a
People speaking of Jesus, speaking of Jesus to one another, to their coworkers,
to their neighbors? Do you see a People whose hearts have been captured by a
love for Jesus?
Do you see a
People for whom the Body of Christ is more important than their denomination,
their movement, their doctrinal distinctives? (Please understand, whether
someone is in a denomination or is so-called nondenominational is irrelevant.)
Do you see pastors in fellowship and in ministry and friendship across organizational
lines?
Since we do not
know who we are, we allow others to define who we are and to enslave us to their
idols. Political idols, economic idols, national idols, sports idols,
entertainment idols, racial idols, idols of pleasure, idols of possessions,
worldview idols (including so-called “Christian” worldviews). We even craft
idols from the Bible, such as “End Times” idols.
Revelation 11:2
speaks of the nations treading under foot the court outside the temple, the
holy city. I wonder if “we” are the perpetrators, if “we” aren’t desecrating
the holy city with our foolishness, with our pollution.
Are we not like
the people in Haggai? These people were released from Babylon for the express
purpose of rebuilding the Temple of God, and yet when they arrived in Jerusalem
they were only concerned with their own houses (see Haggai).
We have been
saved from sin and death to follow Jesus, to belong to Him, to be the Holy
Temple in the Lord (Eph. 2:19 – 22; 4:1 – 16; 1 Peter 2:4 – 10), to be the
Presence of God in the earth.
Now I realize
that there are exceptions to our self-destructive behavior, but they are exceptions.
Thank God for the exceptions, for I think they hold back a measure of the
tsunami.
Only the Holy
Spirit can bring us into the unity that Jesus prays for, we cannot organize
this, we cannot program this, in fact, we must come to the end of ourselves, we
must confess that “Unless the LORD builds the house, they labor in vain who
build it” (Psalm 127:1).
To lay down our
lives for one another (1 John 3:16; John 15:12 – 13), includes laying down our
preferences, our little religious houses, our theological and religious idols…our
self-interest.
Is this
possible?
The measure
of a man, a woman, a family, a local church, a movement or denomination, an
institution, is the measure in which it gives itself for others, the measure in
which is lays down its self-interest, it’s life. This is the measure of
Jesus Christ.